The existing code would cause utf8len_tab to be declared as non-extern
when main.cpp included globals.h as well as in mbyte.c. This causes the
following warning
Linking C executable ../../bin/nvim
/usr/bin/ld: Warning: size of symbol `utf8len_tab' changed from 256 in CMakeFiles/nvim.dir/main.c.o to 320 in CMakeFiles/nvim.dir/mbyte.c.o
Moving the definition to globals.h and using INIT() ensures the array is
only defined in main.cpp and other places globals.h is included see an
extern declaration.
Eliminate mb_init():
Set "enc_utf" and "has_mbyte" early. Eliminate "enc_unicode" and "enc_latin1like".
init_chartab() and screenalloc() are already invoked elsewhere
in the initialization process.
The EncodingChanged autocmd cannot be triggered.
At initialization, there is no spellfiles to reload
`utf_ambiguous_width` expects the Unicode character, but in 9e1c6596 I
just passed the first UTF-8 byte to the function. This led to various
display problems because now many multi-cell characters weren't falling
into that part of the branch.
Also, to better align with the existing Vim code, remove the forced
cursor update. Setting the flag will cause it to happen in the next
UI_CALL.
Thanks to qvacua for all the help investigating the issue!
Closes#5448
Problem: Display problems when the 'ambiwidth' and 'emoji' options are not
set properly or the terminal doesn't behave as expected.
Solution: After drawing an ambiguous width character always position the
cursor.
cb0700844c
Problem: Handling emoji characters as full width has problems with
backwards compatibility.
Solution: Remove ambiguous and double width characters from the emoji table.
Use a separate table for the character class.
(partly by Yashuhiro Matsumoto)
b86f10ee10
Problem: Emoji characters are not considered as a kind of word character.
Solution: Give emoji characters a word class number. (Yashuhiro Matsumoto)
4077b33a83
Problem: Although emoji characters are ambiguous width, best is to treat
them as full width.
Solution: Update the Unicode character tables. Add the 'emoji' options.
(Yasuhiro Matsumoto)
3848e00e01
move `call_shell` to misc1.c
Move some fns to state.c
Move some fns to option.c
Move some fns to memline.c
Move `vim_chdir*` fns to file_search.c
Move some fns to new module, bytes.c
Move some fns to fileio.c
To get an UTF-8 character, utf_ptr2char() is used.
But this function can read more than maxlen bytes, if an incomplete
byte sequence is used(first byte specifies a length > maxlen).
Change POROJECT_NAME to 'nvim', and use it as the gettext
domain name. The *.mo files, previously installed as
$runtime/lang/xx/LC_MESSAGES/nvim.mo, are now installed as
$prefix/locale/xx/LC_MESSAGES/nvim.mo.
Regarding the individual items in the header:
`Vim - Vi improved by Bram Moolenar`
Bram Moolenar is already mentioned throughout the documentation, as
well as the intro screen.
`:help uganda`
It's already shown to all users who don't use `shortmess+=I` upon
starting nvim, and is already placed prominently in help.txt, i.e.,
`:help` run with no arguments.
`:help credits`
Already mentioned near the top of help.txt.
`README.md`
Already mentioned in develop.txt.
What works:
1. ShaDa file dumping: header, registers, jump list, history, search patterns,
substitute strings, variables.
2. ShaDa file reading: registers, global marks, variables.
Most was not tested.
TODO:
1. Merging.
2. Reading history, local marks, jump and buffer lists.
3. Documentation update.
4. Converting some data from &encoding.
5. Safer variant of dumping viminfo (dump to temporary file then rename).
6. Removing old viminfo code (currently masked with `#if 0` in a ShaDa file for
reference).
Making an environment variable empty can be a way of unsetting it for
platforms that don't support unsetenv(). In most cases, we treat empty
variables as having been unset. For all others, use os_env_exists().
We already use wrappers for allocation, the new `xfree` function is the
equivalent for deallocation and provides a way to fully replace the malloc
implementation used by Neovim.
These were found with -Wunused-macros. There are many more macros which
triggered that warning, but they were primarily part of larger sets of
macros so leave them alone.
Regarding dict_lookup() in eval.c: both definitions are the same, the
only difference being the spacing between the indirection operator and
the indentation level.
A similar macro is defined in the Linux kernel [1].
To refactor the code I used a slightly modified Coccinelle script I found in
[2].
```diff
// Use the macro ARRAY_SIZE when possible
//
// Confidence: High
// Copyright: (C) Gilles Muller, Julia Lawall, EMN, DIKU. GPLv2.
// URL: http://www.emn.fr/x-info/coccinelle/rules/array.html
// Options: -I ... -all_includes can give more complete results
@@
type T;
T[] E;
@@
- (sizeof(E)/sizeof(*E))
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
@@
type T;
T[] E;
@@
- (sizeof(E)/sizeof(E[...]))
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
@@
type T;
T[] E;
@@
- (sizeof(E)/sizeof(T))
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
@n@
identifier AS,E;
@@
- #define AS(E) ARRAY_SIZE(E)
@@
expression E;
identifier n.AS;
@@
- AS(E)
+ ARRAY_SIZE(E)
```
`spatch --in-place --sp-file array_size.cocci -I src/ -I build/include/ -I build/src/nvim/auto/ src/nvim/*.c`
[1] http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/include/linux/kernel.h#L54
[2] http://www.emn.fr/z-info/coccinelle/rules/#macros
`-Wstrict-prototypes` warn if a function is declared or defined without
specifying the argument types.
This warning disallow function prototypes with empty parameter list.
In C, a function declared with an empty parameter list accepts an
arbitrary number of arguments when being called. This is for historic
reasons; originally, C functions didn't have prototypes, as C evolved
from B, a typeless language. When prototypes were added, the original
typeless declarations were left in the language for backwards
compatibility.
Instead we should provide `void` in argument list to state
that function doesn't have arguments.
Also this warning disallow declaring type of the parameters after the
parentheses because Neovim header generator produce no declarations for
old-stlyle prototypes: it expects to find `{` after prototype.